Friday, May 19

Sounding like something the great BFG might serve at a picnic, SWIZZLEis a switchel-delivery-method of carbonated water/ginger/apple cider and maple from UP MOUNTAIN SWITCHEL.

Switchel, haymakers punch. 4 simple ingredients when Up Mountain Switchel
make it for you; local organic maple syrup, local organic apple cider
vinegar, organic fresh ginger root, and Berkshire mountain water. This
brand gives you a huge hit of ginger. Fantastic on its own or as a
mixer. Trialed in the outdoor markets and fairs of Vermont.

"Like maple sugaring, haying a hill farm in the pre-mechanized era was a
chancy, nerve-wracking job, in which Gramp's patience with me
frequently wore thin... after helping unload the wagon I could run to
the milk house cooling tank for the stone jug of switchel which my
grandmother made up each morning... the traditional northern New England
field hands' drink decocted from pure spring water with a touch of
vinegar..."
- Frank Mosher, Northern Borders

Laura
Ingalls-Wilder drank it, as did Herman Melville. Unbeknownst to them it
provided electrolytes, anti-inflammatories and more - a fenceposter
gatorade. Switchel may have originated in the Caribbean (ginger and
molasses give a clue) but was transformed in New England with the
substitution of maple syrup or sometimes honey.

This brand has always delivered in glass, never plastic. As they note; "In the United States alone, 50 billion
plastic bottles were used
last year (that's over 7x the entire world population). Only 23% were recycled, which means 38 billion ended up in
our landfills, on our streets, and in our oceans." Not on their watch.

Tuesday, May 9

Recently re-connected with the resident Brand Archivist and Historian at Carhartt, Inc.,
Dave Moore, who is tasked with creating their physical archive
from the materials at hand - as well as setting an agenda for
collections and processes. You can read my earlier interview of Moore here.

Many 10e readers share my fascination with this storied brand and its
place in the workwear canon. I have noted before that Carhartt seemed a
little late-to-the-party to formally organize an archive, so always
interested to hear what is happening now and any academic principals
that guided their decisions.

Ranch or 'western' wear made sense as an expansion of Carhartt's construction line and as customers were found south and west, the southwestern influence came back too. Here looking at the specific southwestern designs offered in the 1990s from Carhartt (sometimes called Aztec due to the geometrics reminiscence of South American art). These are pretty handily available on eBay (as noted below) - the rest of the images presented direct from the Carhartt archives. Enjoy - and thanks again to Dave Moore again for the informative interview!

Image: Carhartt courier pull sheet. 1992.

************************

10engines: I am interested to
see first examples (as well as the loudest and "best") of Carhartt's southwestern designs from the archive
and catalogs.

Dave Moore: The first Southwest Carhartt products were made in 1991 - a
blue denim and black denim jacket, with Southwest pattern linings.

DM: I would say
that the award for the loudest is a dead heat between the Aztec Jacket and the Printed Chamois Shirt.

[via eBay]

[via eBay]

[via eBay]

10e: When did the range
actually start?

DM: 1991, although these were Southwest linings only. 1992 was the first year that Southwest-style patterns began to appear on
the exterior of the garments with the Southwest Look Sweatshirts (see above). The
last year Southwest products were produced was 1995.

Aside from garments, we sold Blanket Southwest Look Caps in
1992 and 1993. They came in quite the variety - bills in different fabrics that were either
unwashed, stone washed, or acid washed, and a ton of different patterns. When
ordered by retailers, they came one dozen to a box with “assorted colors.”

[via eBay. Insanity - ed.]

[via eBay]

[via eBay]

DM: We also offered versions of some of our most iconic products
with Southwest linings, including the Chore Coat, which celebrates its 100th
anniversary this year. This is a garment that has not seen a huge amount of
experimentation in its blanket lining over the years, so the inclusion of the
Southwest influence in the ‘90s is particularly of note.

10e: And these were an offshoot from
western wear?

DM: 1992 was the first year that Carhartt made the garments that
are most synonymous with our Southwest styling. Two of the products were,
indeed, an evolution of Carhartt’s Ranch/Western Wear, which traces back to the
1960s.

DM: The Southwestern Style Jackets were billed in their product descriptions as
having “Traditional Western styling”.

DM: Carhartt also produced a version of our classic Active Jac with Southwest
styling. These garments were
a bit more muted than 1994’s Aztec Jacket, as the Southwest pattern only
appeared in a stripe across the chest. They were, however, produced in an array
of colors that were right at home in the ‘90s, such as teal blue, carbon blue,
cactus (a bright green), plum/damson, and redwood (a bright red).

[via eBay]

DM: It consistently blows me away how many of these various
products you can find on online auction and vintage sites, often in good
condition, considering they were only made for about a five year period.

10E: Do you have any
knowledge of the designers behind the choices? Sources of their inspiration?

DM: According to Mark Valade, Carhartt CEO/Chairman of the
Board: “There were other western wear manufacturers at that time that produced
these products, but our then sales manager – who was also our product developer
– knew the jacket style could be a market for us as our western consumers
already knew the brand… meaning we had credibility in the western wear market.
Carhartt was a smaller company at the time, and we found new markets through
trial and error. The webbing color and patterns came from US mills that
specialized in western prints. [Current VP of Product Development] Deb Ferraro improved the jacket and updated the prints as she became our first
professional product designer.”

DM: According to Deb Ferraro, Carhartt VP of Product
Development: “The western items were in the line when I started. I updated the
pattern that was on the chest of the duck jackets and I worked on the printed
jacket and printed chamois shirt. The influence was the western market at the
time. For the chamois shirting, I worked with Cone Mills to create the print
design. I believe Avondale Mills printed the duck [DM: they have since gone out of
business].”

[via eBay]

10E: Any scans or images of
promo materials from this style. I have not seen much have to say.

DM: Very limited selection - by my records, it doesn’t appear to
have ever been marketed as its own line, per se. These are scans from a pamphlet dubbed the
“Carhartt Courier,” which was a communique sent to retailers of Carhartt
products to inform them of new offerings, advertising campaigns, co-op
materials, etc.

10E: So the timeline would be...

1991Southwest
linings appear

1992Southwest Look
Sweatshirts and Caps released

1993Traditional
Western Wear products and Active Jac released in Southwest patterns

1994The Aztec Jacket and the Printed Chamois
Shirt, some of the most eclectic products ever in the line, appear

1995The final year
Carhartt’s Southwest products are produced

10E: Do you know if
Carhartt plans to reproduce any of these historic products?

DM: We, of course, work pretty far out on product R&D, and I do work with the
design department pretty regularly. Vintage patterns and styles are very much
in the current mindset for product development. As far as reproduction of
historic products in general, this year we’ll be releasing a 100th
anniversary limited edition Chore Coat, which will include historic styling
elements and a Faribault® lining.

***************

Some great stuff - thank you again Dave Moore and Carhartt for dipping into the past. Cheers!